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IndustryArena Forum > MetalWorking Machines > Benchtop Machines > Another extended (sorta)X2 base idea
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  1. #1
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    Jun 2007
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    Another extended (sorta)X2 base idea

    Hey all-

    I was thinking about Hoss's extended base for the X2 freak the other day and I think I have another idea I'm hoping I could get some feedback on- one that might get you up to another 2+ inches of Y travel beyond even the legendary Freak...

    What if you were to take 2 super x1 bases (the ones with the extended Y travel), square off the ends, mill out some clearence through the column block on one of them for the y axis screw and bolt them togather similar to the X2 freak's base? From what I've been reading online, the super X1 base seems superior in design to the X2's to begin with, and the travel of 1 super X1 base is 7 inches, meaning 2 bases would mean about 14 before trying to message out a bit more by grinding down supports or screw mounts. The size of the mounting block for the tippable column angle plate looks similar to the one for the X2- if not, a bolt/spacer plate would be a quick fab job, I would think.

    Has anyone ever tried an X1/X2 hybrid on here before? Does anyone have any opinions on this or am I just talkin' crazy?

    -F

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
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    445
    It's more of a personal opinion than anything else, but I guess I really just don't "get" this need for crazy travel on smaller machines. Yes, I understand the desire to cut larger workpieces, that's all well and good to want to do larger stuff, but to me that's always meant either figure a way around your travels by breaking cuts up, or using (or paying to have used) a larger machine.
    I'd personally rather have 6" of solid travel that I can count on, and not have to watch constantly for deflection in the table or head mounting. Y is particularly concerning since you really need to keep inching the spindle out further to gain actual travel. More moment load, and more potential for stuff to go wrong during a cut.
    It just seems that people get carried away in trying to see who can get the most, without regard for the impact it has on their work.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Posts
    84
    As far as a need for more Y travel goes, I am a hobbyest machinist- I like to tinker and mess with things in order to see how far I can push things. I would bet many other people on here are the same way, too. There are plenty of reasons I can see buying the next larger size machine, as many people who see as you do suggest, but for me, I can't afford the machines that would be of this size (a decent CNC setup can run $10K or so if you're at all serious), machines this size wouldn't fit in my house (no garage, no basement exterior access) and I genuinely enjoy seeing how far I can mod something. This is not a business for me, its a hobby. I personally don't get why many people do the things that they do for fun, but so long as they aren't hurting anyone, se la ve. Given my constraints, I have to work with what I have, and if by engineering the tools I have to do things beyond their original designs, great. For me it serves a purpose, and I'm not working for you or anyone else. If you have the space, time and money to upgrade to a half-million turning center, congratulations, but that's you. If you don't agree with what I've done, that's fine too, but I'm not asking for your permission or your blessing; I was just askiing a question for the other folks who do a little tinkering themselves. If you have any thoughts about my inquiry, I'm happy to hear them. If not, why waste your time responding?

    -F

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Farasien View Post
    As far as a need for more Y travel goes, I am a hobbyest machinist- I like to tinker and mess with things in order to see how far I can push things. I would bet many other people on here are the same way, too. There are plenty of reasons I can see buying the next larger size machine, as many people who see as you do suggest, but for me, I can't afford the machines that would be of this size (a decent CNC setup can run $10K or so if you're at all serious), machines this size wouldn't fit in my house (no garage, no basement exterior access) and I genuinely enjoy seeing how far I can mod something. This is not a business for me, its a hobby. I personally don't get why many people do the things that they do for fun, but so long as they aren't hurting anyone, se la ve. Given my constraints, I have to work with what I have, and if by engineering the tools I have to do things beyond their original designs, great. For me it serves a purpose, and I'm not working for you or anyone else. If you have the space, time and money to upgrade to a half-million turning center, congratulations, but that's you. If you don't agree with what I've done, that's fine too, but I'm not asking for your permission or your blessing; I was just askiing a question for the other folks who do a little tinkering themselves. If you have any thoughts about my inquiry, I'm happy to hear them. If not, why waste your time responding?

    -F
    I couldn't agree more!:cheers:
    Why would someone build a mill completely from scratch when they could just buy one? Same difference.
    It's my mill, I'll do whatever I want.
    The X1 hybrid sounds good.
    Hoss
    http://www.hossmachine.info - Gosh, you've... really got some nice toys here. - Roy Batty -- http://www.g0704.com - http://www.bf20.com - http://www.g0602.com

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
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    445
    Quote Originally Posted by Farasien View Post
    As far as a need for more Y travel goes, I am a hobbyest machinist- I like to tinker and mess with things in order to see how far I can push things. I would bet many other people on here are the same way, too. There are plenty of reasons I can see buying the next larger size machine, as many people who see as you do suggest, but for me, I can't afford the machines that would be of this size (a decent CNC setup can run $10K or so if you're at all serious), machines this size wouldn't fit in my house (no garage, no basement exterior access) and I genuinely enjoy seeing how far I can mod something. This is not a business for me, its a hobby. I personally don't get why many people do the things that they do for fun, but so long as they aren't hurting anyone, se la ve. Given my constraints, I have to work with what I have, and if by engineering the tools I have to do things beyond their original designs, great. For me it serves a purpose, and I'm not working for you or anyone else. If you have the space, time and money to upgrade to a half-million turning center, congratulations, but that's you. If you don't agree with what I've done, that's fine too, but I'm not asking for your permission or your blessing; I was just askiing a question for the other folks who do a little tinkering themselves. If you have any thoughts about my inquiry, I'm happy to hear them. If not, why waste your time responding?

    -F
    It's pretty much the response I expected, from now on I'll just keep out of your thread. My comment was not to deride you for your choices, but as a general point of discussion, and to present another point of view. You don't want to even entertain it, that's cool.
    I work with what I have too. I just have a different way of getting the results I need.

  6. #6
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    May 2007
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    1026
    Quote Originally Posted by Farasien View Post
    From what I've been reading online, the super X1 base seems superior in design to the X2's to begin with
    Not sure where this idea came from...

    Unless the SX1 has a totally different base design than the long-base/non-tilting X1, I'm pretty sure it would be a much more complex project than the X2 Freak. The X1 base has a female dovetail that the saddle goes into, which is the opposite of the X2. So, you'd need to machine new dovetails on the base, assuming there's even enough material there to begin with.

  7. #7
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    Jun 2007
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    It seems you believe I'm planning on mating an X1 base to an X2 base... not my intent- that would be way too much work with not nearly enough payoff, and if I were planning on going that route, I'd probably put more time into finding someone who could supply me with a honkin' big chunk of cast iron and start totally from scratch (I started a thread on that idea about a month or so ago- I'm having BIG problems finding c. iron suppliers who don't either want a grand for the piece I'm looking for (roughly 12X24X4 inches) or who will supply me with only 1 piece instead of several tons at once... argh!). While that option is still under (back-burner) exploration, I was saying to take 2 Sx1 bases and mate them in a similar manner Hoss did with the X2 freak. My thought is that the travel in the sX1 base is supposed to have about 7 inches in travel (according to a friend with one and several websites who mention it) as-is. If I could take 2 bases, bolt them togather and do a little machining on them, I could possibly get 14 inches total travel before machining everything else (screw mounts, saddle, etc.). With all of that, I might even get more than 14 total. With Hoss's articulating head spacer (plus a little more) and the super-rigid back brace I made for the column I have already, it could be a fully usable 14+ inch Y machine.

    -F

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2007
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    1026
    Let me try this again...


    The X2 saddle looks like this:

    |||||||||||||||||||||
    ||\\ ...............//||

    X2 Base:

    ......\\.........//......
    |||||||||||||||||||||

    On the X1, the saddle looks like:

    |||||||||||||||||||||
    .....//...........\\.....

    While the base looks like:

    ||//................\\||
    |||||||||||||||||||||

    You can't mate an X2 saddle to an X1 base without modifying one or the other, as you'd have two sets of the same kind of dovetails. Won't work, even in Vermont or Massachusetts. You could just use the entire X1 X/Y assembly, but that would mean smaller dovetails with less contact surface. There are some things I like about the X1 base design better, but not that much better.

  9. #9
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    Nov 2008
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    49
    if you guys are looking for an X2 base. Give harbor freight a call. They have a seperate number for parts. Your local store should be able to give you the number. I got an X2 base imported and shipped to my door for $23.27

    Beat that price.

  10. #10
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    Dec 2008
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    Quote Originally Posted by SSfab View Post
    if you guys are looking for an X2 base. Give harbor freight a call. They have a seperate number for parts. Your local store should be able to give you the number. I got an X2 base imported and shipped to my door for $23.27

    Beat that price.
    Sounds like you are lucky enough to have a local harbor freight store, I'm jealous Any chance you could find the part number and/or phone number? Sounds like a heck of a deal and I want one

    Mark [mkenney]

  11. #11
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    Mar 2008
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    3655
    Quote Originally Posted by sansbury View Post
    You can't mate an X2 saddle to an X1 base without modifying one or the other, as you'd have two sets of the same kind of dovetails. Won't work, even in Vermont or Massachusetts. You could just use the entire X1 X/Y assembly, but that would mean smaller dovetails with less contact surface. There are some things I like about the X1 base design better, but not that much better.
    Surely he means to use the longer, wider X1 extended table and saddle with the modded X1 Base.

    http://littlemachineshop.com/product...2642&category=

    http://littlemachineshop.com/product...2297&category=

    CR.

  12. #12
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    Mar 2008
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    Quote Originally Posted by mkenney View Post
    Sounds like you are lucky enough to have a local harbor freight store, I'm jealous Any chance you could find the part number and/or phone number? Sounds like a heck of a deal and I want one

    Mark [mkenney]
    You can probably order it online:

    http://harborfreight.com/

    Here's the manual. Parts lists are at the end:

    http://www.harborfreight.com/manuals...4999/44991.PDF

    CR.

  13. #13
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    Nov 2008
    Posts
    49
    No you can't order them online. If you go through Grizzly you can.

    I wanted a red one instead of green for cosmetic reasons.

    I will post up the number when i get home.

  14. #14
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    May 2007
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    1026
    Quote Originally Posted by Crevice Reamer View Post
    Surely he means to use the longer, wider X1 extended table and saddle with the modded X1 Base.
    Well he didn't say that, did he? I'm not so sure I'd assume that as that move would involve a lot more sacrifice. The X1 dovetails are smaller and the saddle is narrower. Compared to my X2, my X1 required almost constant adjustment of the gibs to keep them reasonably tight. I would tighten them at the start of any job and if it was long I'd check again in the middle. My X2 has so far required a lot less fiddling. With the additional power of the X2 spindle, this would be even worse. I don't know what the effect on surface finish would be since this is also a function of the (mostly) superior X2 column. I do know that I can get better finishes on my X2 with little effort.

    Also, if you want to put ballscrews on, you're SOL since the X1 doesn't have clearance for 5/8" screws like everyone uses for the X2/X3. You'd have to go with special small ones that will likely cost more than the mill. And sticking with the stock screws on the X1 will probably lead to tears if you want better than .01" backlash.

  15. #15
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    Mar 2008
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    No doubt he could just bypass BOTH X1 and X2 and buy an X3. This would REALLY be a lot better!

    CR.

  16. #16
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    Jun 2007
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    Actually, I remember seeing somewhere on the net a Sx1 CNC conversion that had ballscrews on it- I don't know how they fit the things under the saddle, but it was there. I was thinking it might be possible if you cut some clearance on the underside of the saddle and, if you needed a bit more, a slot on the base, too. It looks like there is room enough on the casting for that, so long as you don't hog out too much. Also, as far as the gib issue, I would think better gibs might be a possibility too... A friend of mine replaced the stock gibs on his X1 with a piece he made out of a good piece of A2 tool steel that was wider than the stock- it filled up alot more of the clearance where the gib sits under the saddle. From what he's told me, he rarely has to adjust anything.

    -F

  17. #17
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Posts
    84

    MUHAHA- Success!

    Hey all-

    I've been working on a new base for my X2 mill, and after getting it done, have decided I want to go a lot further and make a new saddle and X axis table for it. The base was made by bolting/welding together some mild steel 2X4's, grinding it flat on top/bottom, bolting some steel plate to the top to act as the travel surface, then bolting 2 plates with the existing X2 mill's 35 degree dovetails cut into them (see photos). After seeing how the X2 saddle looks on the beast (small and unbalanced), I thought it could use a new saddle and X axis table while I was at it.

    The problem is, nobody seems to sell a 35 degree dovetail cutter, which is what I found the saddle's dovetails to be.

    Does anybody know of where I might pick up a 35 deg. dovetail cutter? MSC/J&L and LMS don't seem to have them, and for the last few months, Ebay has been nada as well...

    I could just make a new set of dovetail plates, but after all the work I;ve put in, I'd rather not...

    -Farasien
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails DSC00551.JPG   DSC00552.JPG   DSC00553.JPG   DSC00554.JPG  

    DSC00555.JPG   DSC00556.JPG  

  18. #18
    It's not an X2 anymore, it's a Farasian.
    Nice work Erik, it'll be a beast when you're done.
    You can pick up a 55 degree dovetail cutter at Tapdie.com in the UK.
    They aren't cheap, so reworking to use a cheaper 45 or 60 degree cutter commonly used over here
    might sound better afterall.
    If you are scrapping the saddle and table anyhow, you may look into going with boxed ways instead.
    The VMC's at work have boxed ways.
    Surprised I don't see more custom mills using them, would be my first choice over dovetails or rails.
    Do you have the old X2 base, looking to get some cash for it? PM me, I still need one for a project.
    Thanks, Hoss
    http://www.hossmachine.info - Gosh, you've... really got some nice toys here. - Roy Batty -- http://www.g0704.com - http://www.bf20.com - http://www.g0602.com

  19. #19
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    4553

    Post

    Farasien,

    Give Moon Cutter a call, they may have the dovetail cutter you need.

    http://www.mooncutter.com/

    If they don't stock it they will make it.

    Jeff...
    Patience and perseverance have a magical effect before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish.

  20. #20
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    Jun 2007
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    84

    Boxed ways?

    Thanks Hoss-

    I'd like to part with my x2 base, but alas, I still need it to cut a few things out. Maybe when I get the saddle, X and Z axes (once I can find someone selling a chunk of steel the size I need w/o going broke) I'll be ready to let it go. Isn't LMS selling them? I thought they were available about a month ago...

    Given the work I've already put in, I'm looking for the best possible (and feasible, given my limited experience and tool availability- I don't work in the industry, unfortunately) design I can. I've heard people say bad things about the ways on the 7xX and similar lathes, but nothing about the ways on mills. I was considering going with either 45 or 60 degree dovetails, but I forget what the threshold is for what makes a self-locking taper (my teacher covered it on day 1 class #1... about 3 years ago), and obviously, don't want to go that route if all I get is a brick. Is it 15 degrees or less?

    And forgive my ignorance, but... boxed ways? I'm not familiar with that term. The only thing I can think of is, did you mean the ways that I see on some of the more expensive lathes what are flat (have no V's or grooves)?

    The only thing I can imagine is you might mean 90 degree ways..
    _______________
    | |
    | /\ |
    | //\\ |
    |____// \\______|
    ____/ \______
    | |
    | |
    ------------------------

    Is this what you mean? If so, I could see how this would be good- the ways would wear into one another like a round thread bridgeport axis screw instead of wearing out...

    ...by the way, thanks for the updated drawings. Programs are written-I'm looking forward to my classes this semester so I can cut them out on the EZtrak my school has.

    -Farasien

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